Leading up to the season of carnivals and state fairs, DQ is bringing back a fan-favorite flavor. For the entire month of June, you can score Cotton Candy Blizzards, which are vanilla soft-serve blended and topped with blue and pink cotton-candy–flavored sprinkles.

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Dairy Queen

One man bravely vows to eat Chipotle for 366 days straight

Devin Cunningham has already eaten Chipotle for 314 days in a row. And he doesn't plan on stopping anytime soon. In an attempt to prove that you can make smart choices at your favorite chains without giving up on your fitness goals, the Bellevue, WA resident has ordered everything from burritos and tacos to salads and bowls with "enough variety to switch up my meals and not get sick of it," Q13 Fox reports. Good luck with the last leg of your marathon, dude.

Faux food bookmarks are the only way to read

Made by artist Tokyo Kitsch in Japan, these hyper-realistic food bookmarks honestly look good enough to eat. And they're available as all your favorite bites—including bacon, pancakes, eggs, slice of toast, popsicles, and watermelon. Seriously, this is the only way we want to hold our place in our favorite novels and cookbooks. What's more, they've become so popular that they're currently sold out, but if you keep tabs on the brand's Twitter and Facebook pages, you'll be able to snatch one up for about $10. Did we mention they're available as keychains, too?

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Tokyo Kitsch

Tokyo Kitsch

Oprah wants to start her own food brand

The woman who's created her own television network, part-owns Weight Watchers, and reps Starbucks also wants to find her place in your kitchen. According toNew York Daily News, Oprah Winfrey has applied to trademark her own line of food products called Oprah's Kitchen, which could include hundreds of products like dairy, meat, fish, processed and preserved foods, spices, juices, water, lemonade, baked goods, fresh fruit and vegetables. And so her empire grows.

Jimmy Kimmel weighs in on the hot dog vs. sandwich debate

After Merriam-Webster heated up a lot of people's Memorial Day Weekend by declaring that hot dogs are, in fact, sandwiches, the late night talk show host takes on a Vice President persona to give his official (and hilarious) opinion on the matter.